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ARRL's Vintage Radio -- Articles about the lure of vintage Amateur Radio gear.

Power Supply Handbook -- Gain the knowledge and confidence you need to build and use power supplies. A must have for your bookshelf!

ARRL's Hands-On Radio Experiments -- Over 60 basic electronics experiments from the pages of QST!

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Hints & Kinks--17th edition -- Now including the popular Hands-On Radio column from QST Workbench.

The "Considerate Operator's Frequency Guide"

Band Plans

The following frequencies are generally recognized for certain modes or activities (all frequencies are in MHz).

Nothing in the rules recognizes a net's, group's or any individual's special privilege to any specific frequency. Section 97.101(b) of the Rules states that "Each station licensee and each control operator must cooperate in selecting transmitting channels and in making the most effective use of the amateur service frequencies. No frequency will be assigned for the exclusive use of any station." No one "owns" a frequency.

It's good practice--and plain old common sense--for any operator, regardless of mode, to check to see if the frequency is in use prior to engaging operation. If you are there first, other operators should make an effort to protect you from interference to the extent possible, given that 100% interference-free operation is an unrealistic expectation in today's congested bands.

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Notes

ARRL band plans for frequencies above 28.300 MHz are shown in The ARRL Repeater Directory and The FCC Rule Book. For detailed packet frequencies, see QST, September 1987, page 54, and March 1988, page 51.

NCDXF/IARU beacons operate on 14.100, 18.110, 21.150, 24.930 and 28.200 MHz.



Page last modified: 09:58 AM, 23 Feb 2007 ET
Page author: reginfo@arrl.org
Copyright © 2007, American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved.